The NFL is continuing to monitor spying devices following the penalties levied by commissioner Roger Goodell this week against the New England Patriots.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said Sunday that new memos on both videotaping and electronic surveillance of signals have gone out to all 32 teams reminding them of bans on the various types of surveillance.

“It’s nothing new,” Aiello said. “We just want to remind people how the rules work.”

In his first public comments about the incident, Goodell said before Sunday night’s Chargers-Patriots game on NBC that he reserved the right to expand the punishment if he were to learn additional or different information. He said he believed New England owner Robert Kraft, who said he was not aware of the spying.

Goodell said he trusted that the Patriots would turn over all the information to the league that was requested.

“I’m very confident the Patriots are going to abide by the rules,” he said. “They understand that the consequences could increase.”

Last Thursday, Goodell fined New England coach Bill Belichick $500,000 and fined the team $250,000 following the confiscation of a video camera from a Patriots representative on the field during the season opener at the Jets. Videotaping on the field is forbidden during games.

Everett watches Bills

Falling in and out of sleep in his hospital bed, Bills tight end Kevin Everett was well enough to watch part of Buffalo’s 26-3 loss to Pittsburgh on TV, a week after he sustained a life-threatening spinal-cord injury.

“We had a TV put in his room and he watched part of the game,” Millard Fillmore Gates Hospital spokesman Mike Hughes said. He added Everett, who slept through part of the game, was joined by his mother, Patricia Dugas, a family friend and a Bills player’s wife.

Hughes was unable to provide an update on Everett’s condition, except to say that doctors continue to urge him to rest.

As a sign of support, Bills players designed and wore beneath their jerseys a T-shirt, which had Everett’s name and No. 85 printed on the back. During its game broadcast, CBS also featured a brief clip of Bills tackle Derrick Dockery wishing Everett well.

Following the game, Bills coach Dick Jauron spoke of how his team wanted to win and play well in honor of their injured teammate.

“They wanted all those things to happen and they didn’t happen. That’s just the way things go,” Jauron said. “But all of those things are what they wanted.”

There have been significant signs of progress in the week since Everett was hurt when he ducked his head while tackling Denver’s Domenik Hixon during the second-half kickoff in the season opener. Everett dropped face-first after his helmet hit Hixon high on the left shoulder and side of the helmet.

Violent police encounters in California last year led to the deaths of 157 people and six officers, the state attorney general’s office said Thursday in a report that provides the first statewide tally on police use-of-force incidents.

At 6:03 p.m. Wednesday, police responded to reports of the robbery at the facility, 2301 Bancroft way, and learned that a man who snuck into the facility and began prowling through the building, taking cell phones and wallets from victims.

Investigators’ efforts to solve the case led to the arrests of Pablo Mendoza, 25, of Hayward, Brandon Follings, 26, of Oakland and Valeria Boden, 26, of Alameda, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office said Thursday.